Acharya Prashant explains that action is inevitable, but its source—whether from unconscious blindness or desirelessness—is what matters. He addresses the apparent contradiction between the instantaneous nature of liberation and Kabir Saheb's teaching that everything happens slowly in its own time. He clarifies that the cycle of seasons, growth, and waiting for fruit applies only to the body and the mind, which are products of time. The soul, or the 'root,' is beyond time and is already complete. Those who identify with the body will always be in a state of waiting and expectation, whereas the wise person sees the fruit already present in the root and recognizes that everything is essentially nothingness or 'shunya'. He emphasizes that Kabir Saheb's verses are not mere instructions for the mind to be patient, but invitations to transcend the mind altogether. To truly understand a saint, one must not just collect their words as information but must reach the source from which those words emerge. Acharya Prashant urges the listener to stop being a 'beggar' of verses and instead become the source itself. He explains that the mind will always perceive diversity and movement, but one should remain established in the 'witness' state (Sakshi), where everything is already attained. When one lives from this state of completeness, the mind's actions become rhythmic and its speech becomes musical, reflecting the divine sweetness of Kabir Saheb's own words.